Goldman Sachs Misled Congress After Duping Clients
(Bloomberg)Senator Carl Levin, releasing the findings of a two-year inquiry, said he wants the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission to examine whether Goldman Sachs violated the law by misleading clients who bought the complex securities known as collateralized debt obligations (CDO’s) without knowing the firm was betting they would fall in value.
Spend twenty minutes per week browsing Investment Tools and you will be better informed than most financial experts!
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Quick Overview
- U.S. retail sales rose 0.4%, falling short of pre-report expectations of 0.5%.
- Investors were buying more silver than ever, underpinning prices that are already at record highs, says the head of Bombay Bullion Association.
- Obama vowed to cut $4 trillion in cumulative deficits within 12 years through a combination of spending cuts and tax increases.
- The EU antitrust regulator on Wednesday fined consumer goods giants Procter & Gamble (PG) and Unilever (UL) a total of 315.2 million Euros for fixing prices of washing powder.
- China is expected to raise interest rates another two times in the second quarter of this year in an effort to counter persistent inflation pressures, a chief government economist said Wednesday.
- France recorded YoY inflation of 2 % in March, up from 1.7% a month ago.
- The Japanese earthquake may be having more of an impact on the U.S. economy than previously believed, according to the Federal Reserve’s latest Beige Book.
- The U.S. government on Wednesday ordered 16 of the nation's largest mortgage lenders and servicers to reimburse homeowners who were improperly foreclosed upon.
Monday, April 11, 2011
Lessons From a Meltdown But truly long term planning has never been a forte of our species. So the urgency of our energy needs combined with the entrenched interests of big corporations - in this case the nuclear, construction and ancillary industries - has left us with a Faustian pact with only the most dangerous solutions.
- (Japanese authorities planned Tuesday to raise their rating of the severity of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear crisis to the highest level on an international scale, equal to that of the 1986 Chernobyl)
Quick Overview
- (Bloomberg) -- All the soybeans in Iowa won’t be enough to meet the anticipated surge in China’s imports over the next four years as the nation feeds a record pig herd and drives bean prices to an all-time high.
- Procter & Gamble (PG) raised the quarterly dividend by 9% to 52.5 cents
- Two of the Fed's most powerful officials said the U.S. central bank should stick to its super-easy monetary policy, arguing inflation is not a threat and unemployment remains too high.
- The Fed needs to keep an easy monetary policy in place while the government comes to grip with its debts, the IMF said.
- PIMCO, the world's largest bond fund, has shifted to a short position in U.S. bonds
Friday, April 08, 2011
Quick Overview
- The U.S. dollar is losing more ground on fears of shutdown for the U.S. government. The two sides had agreed on everything but a $300 million cut for Planned Parenthood (Abortion) that the House Republican/Tea want included in a budget resolution.
- Silver is above $40, Gold at record, crude oil above $111
- European finance ministers say Portugal will have to implement deeper austerity measures in return for a multi-billion euro bailout, expected to total around $115 billion over three years, while also insisting Spain won’t be sucked into the crisis — although other aren’t so sure.
- The USDA Estimates:
- Wheat ending stocks of 839 million bushels, against trade estimate of 857 million and 843 million last month. World ending stocks rose to 182.8 MT against the 182 MMT estimated and 181.9 MMT in March.
- USDA pegs texas wheat crop at 64.8 mln bushels, down 49% YoY Corn ending stocks unchanged at 675 million bushels, against trade estimate of 586 million. World ending stocks came in at 122.4 MT against 121 MMT estimated and 123 MMT in March. Brazil's corn crop was estimated at 52 MMT, 2 MMT up from last month. Argentine output unchanged at 22 MMT.
- Soybeans ending stocks estimate unchanged at 140 million bushels, against the average trade estimate of 137 million. World ending stocks estimate at 60.9 MT against 58.9 MMT and 58.3 MMT in March. Brazilian output was raised 2 MMT to 72 MMT. Argentine production was left unchanged at 49.5 MMT, as was China’s at 15.2 MMT.
Thursday, April 07, 2011
Quick Overview
- Republicans are pushing legislation that would dramatically expand offshore drilling before mandating new safety requirements.
- The ECB raised the benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point to 1.25%.
- The surge of hot money that has vexed many emerging markets may slow dramatically once the U.S. Federal Reserve begins raising interest rates, the International Monetary Fund said.
- The U.S. appears to have an off-balance-sheet, unrecorded debt burden of close to 500% of GDP! We are out-Greeking the Greeks -- Bill Gross, PIMCO.
- U.S. jobless apps fell 10,000 to 382,000.
- Costco (CSCO) sales rose 13% in March.
- Disputes over abortion and environmental issues pose late hurdles to a budget agreement.
- The expanding dry conditions in the Southern United States are causing pastures to deteriorate and dimming prospects for a wheat crop. According to some experts, sufficient precipitation could salvage the wheat crop. However, others think that it is already too late and that the crop is in too poor a condition for even that prospect.
- More than 25% of Japan's domestic pork, 18% of its beef and 22% of its poultry production comes from areas affected by the earthquake, tsunami or radiation from the Fukushima nuclear plant.
Wednesday, April 06, 2011
Quick Overview
- Boehner: No deal yet on avoiding shutdown.
- Household saving rate at 9.1% in Austria.
- Australian employment at 4.9%.
- China has halted approvals for construction of nuclear-power plants in marine areas.
- Portugal said that it needs to ask for financial aid from the European Union.
- UK Labour predicts Government cuts introduced today will wipe up to £1,560 a year from the income of families with two children.
- Julian Assange, founder of the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, has been given a date in June for his appeal against extradition to Sweden.
- (TI) After notching a rare victory by stopping highly radioactive water from flowing into the Pacific today, workers at Japan's flooded nuclear power complex turned to their next task: injecting nitrogen to prevent more hydrogen explosions.
- Dylan, who will turn 70 in May, played 17 songs ending with "Forever Young" to a nearly packed audience at downtown Beijing's Workers Gymnasium.
- France launched the most ambitious engineering project in Western Europe since the Channel tunnel, a scheme to link Paris to the North Sea by a canal as wide as a football pitch.
- Japan keep its overnight call rate at zero to 0.1%,
Tuesday, April 05, 2011
Quick Overview
- China raised rates to 6.31% from 6.06%.
- The ISM index decreased to 57.3 from 59.7 in February
- The Supreme Court opened the door to a new form of state support for religious schools, upholding special tax credits in Arizona for those who give money to church schools.
- The Fed's Bernanke is watching inflation “extremely closely” for evidence that rising commodity costs are having more than a temporary impact on consumer prices.
- TEPCO: radioactive seawater 7.5 mln times the legal limit.
- Global economy is forecast to grow by a solid pace of 4.3 percent this year and 4.5 percent next year, the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics said
- The U.S. is going to reach the current debt limit of 14.3 trillion U.S. dollars no later than May 16, 2011. A failure to raise the debt limit would bring “severe hardship” for Americans -- Geithner said.
- The White House has ordered top officials at multiple federal agencies to ensure contingency plans are ready for the partial federal shutdown that could take place if lawmakers don't reach a deal on spending levels by midnight Friday.
- Chile's economy is expected to grow between 5.5% and 6.5% in 2011, Central Bank President Jose de Gregorio said.
- US corn futures extend gains on supply concerns."Somebody's going to have to give up their usage if we're going to see a supply left here at the end of the summer," says Keith Gehling, marketing specialist at AgriSource
- Arlan Suderman: The US Grains Council just concluded a tour of China that revealed a greater than expected need for corn. It says that China's corn stocks are probably 390 to 472 million bushels smaller than previously reported. As a result, it believes that China will import another 80 to 120 million bushels of corn ahead of this year's harvest. Sources within China told the Council that they would like to import 200 to 275 million bushels, but realizes that global stocks are simply too tight.
- Global ocean container traffic reached an all-time high of 560 million 20-foot equivalent units in 2010, driven by surging volume at Chinese ports, according to Alphaliner.
Monday, April 04, 2011
Sunday, April 03, 2011
Quick Overview
- Chinese buyers stopped new orders of scrap steel from Japan and blocked some existing cargoes because of concern over radiation from a crippled nuclear plant, researcher Umetal.com said.
- As part of a plan to revamp the state's Medicaid program, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer announced that she is proposing fees for adults who lead unhealthy lives.
- If given the choice between eating a hot dog or enjoying some rotisserie chicken, consider the hot dog. That’s because hot dogs, as well as pepperoni and deli meats, are relatively free of carcinogenic compounds, according to Kansas State University research. But it’s a not-so-happy ending for bacon and rotisserie chicken--especially chicken skin--because both have higher levels of cancerous material.
- Japanese big manufacturers expect conditions to worsen significantly in the next three months, responses to a Bank of Japan survey collected after the March 11 earthquake showed
- The monetary base in Japan surged 16.9% in March from a year earlier, rising for the 31st consecutive month from a 5.6% annual increase booked in the previous month, the BOJ said Monday.
- Australia's inflation rose 0.6% in March
- The e-mails and names of customers of Citigroup Inc, Walgreens and other large U.S. companies were exposed in a massive and growing data breach, after a computer hacker penetrated online marketer Epsilon.
- Helen Hodge, Maplecroft's natural hazards analyst, said: "Although Japanese nuclear facilities are particularly exposed, other countries could also face similar risks. South Korea, Taiwan, southern China, India, Pakistan and the west coast of the US have operating or planned nuclear facilities on tsunami-exposed coastlines, while nuclear sites in areas of high or extreme risk of earthquakes can be found in western US, Taiwan, Armenia, Iran and Slovenia."
- Transocean gave its top executives bonuses for achieving the "best year in safety performance in our company's history" - despite the explosion of its oil rig that killed 11 people and spilled 757 million liters of oil into the Gulf.
Saturday, April 02, 2011
Atomic Moron George Monbiot
Monbiot and his cult of technofascism either fail to understand the difference between radiation that is outside the body vs. radiation that is trapped internal to the body, or else they know full well and just don't give a damn.
Dr. Caldicott: "You don't understand internal emitters. I was commissioned to write an article for the New England Journal of Medicine about the dangers of nuclear power. I spent a year researching it. You've bought the propaganda from the nuclear industry. They say it's low-level radiation. That's absolute rubbish. If you inhale a millionth of a gram of plutonium, the surrounding cells receive a very, very high dose. Most die within that area, because it's an alpha emitter. The cells on the periphery remain viable. They mutate, and the regulatory genes are damaged. Years later, that person develops cancer. Now, that's true for radioactive iodine, that goes to the thyroid; cesium-137, that goes to the brain and muscles; strontium-90 goes to bone, causing bone cancer and leukemia."
Friday, April 01, 2011
Quick Overview
- The U.S. unemployment rate fell to to 8.8% last month, the lowest level since March 2009.
- (AP) NASDAQ is teaming up with Intercontinental Exchange to make an $11.3 billion counteroffer for the parent of the New York Stock Exchange.
- Unemployment in the EU 17 fell below 10% in February down to 9.9% — the lowest since December 2009.
- Japans car makers sold 279,389 cars in Japan last month, down 37% — the biggest YoY drop.
- In Q1 117 companies in the S&P 500 said they intend to raise or start paying dividends -- a record amount.
- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Friday said China should explore and utilize ocean resources scientifically and quicken the development of the marine economy.
- YoY Koreas CPI jumped 4.7 % in March after gaining 4.5% in February
- The Austrian budget deficit in 2010 reached a 15-year record high, accounting for 4.6% of GDP
- Russian GDP rose an annual 4.5 % after a revised 3.1 in the previous three months
- Macau's gambling revenue up 48% YoY.
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Quick Overview
- More than 61 feet of snow has fallen in the 400-mile-long Sierra Nevada mountain range this season, second only to the 1950-51 season when a total of 65 feet fell, according to records kept by the California Department of Transportation.
- China to build cotton reserves to encourage output. The announcement comes as farmers across China are becoming increasingly concerned that cotton prices could tumble from historic highs
- (FT) US farmers, reaping record receipts for crops this year, are also harvesting $10.6bn in government payments.
- Danish unemployment was 4.0% in February, down from a revised figure of 4.1% in January.
- French budget deficit reached 7% of GDP in 2010, pushing up the country's debt-to-GDP ratio to 81.7%. France has said it will cut the deficit to 4.6% of GDP in 2012 and to the agreed EU limit of 3% of GDP by 2013.
- (Bloomberg) -- Essar Group exercised an option to sell a 33 percent stake in Indian joint venture Vodafone Essar Ltd. to partner Vodafone Group Plc (VOD) for $5 billion, Vodafone said.
- (Bloomberg) -- Radiation “far below” levels that pose a risk to humans was found in milk from California and Washington, the first signs Japan’s nuclear accident is affecting U.S. food, state and Obama administration officials said.
- (Bloomberg) -- Coffee, sugar and cocoa prices will rise five- to 10-fold by 2014 because of shortages that will mean consumers getting “swamped” by food inflation, according to Superfund Financial.
- The speculation that an estimated 500,000 to 1 million tons of copper is hidden from the market in China is likely inflated -- so says Commerzbank.
- (Dow Jones) The USDA's lower-than-expected estimate for corn inventories as of March 1 fuels fears that season-end supplies will drop to a record low. Government could slash 50M-75M bushels from the latest season-end supply estimate of 675M in a crop report next week, says Rich Nelson at Allendale. Season-end supplies are already at a 15-year low, representing 18 days worth of corn, he notes.
- New orders for U.S. manufactured goods fell by 0.1% in February
- The Chicago PMI fell to 70.6% in March from 71.2% in February
- First-time U.S. jobless claims drop 6,000 prior week's total revised up to 394,000
- Chinas Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to 53.4 in March from 52.2 in February
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Weather warning America's housing market is in the doldrums
IF AMERICA'S housing market acts as a bellwether for its economy, then new monthly data released on March 29th by Standard & Poor's makes for particularly glum reading.
IF AMERICA'S housing market acts as a bellwether for its economy, then new monthly data released on March 29th by Standard & Poor's makes for particularly glum reading.
Quick Overview
- China may raise its five-year goal for solar power capacity to 10 gigawatts from 5 GW as its nuclear power development may slow, Xinhua said.
- FSLR ,TSL, YGE, LDK, STP, SOLR, MY, JASO, SPWRA, STRI, JKS, CSIQ, EMKR.
- (FT)Russia plans to extend an export ban on cereals for several months in a move that will tighten further stretched agricultural commodities markets.
- (FT) Nowhere is the unbridled enthusiasm for silver clearer than at the level of coins and small bars – the type of product most accessible to smaller investors.
- (DJ)--The rally in the price of silver is running largely on ballooning investment and speculative interest rather than any improving fundamental picture.
- Russia's gold output this year is likely to increase by 4.5% compared with 2010, to 211.4 metric tons, the gold producers union said.
- (Bloomberg) -- Optimism among U.S. chief executive officers surpassed the highest level reached before the recession.
- (Bloomberg) -- About 1.8 million homes that are delinquent or in foreclosure loom as additional supply.
- U.S. private-sector companies added 201,000 jobs in March
- Crude oil stocks rose by 2.9 million barrels in the week ending March 25,
Gasoline stocks fell by 2.7 million.
Distillate fuel stocks rose 0.7 million barrels
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Living and Dying Downwind The unleashed isotopes of concern from the damaged Japanese reactors - Iodine-131, Cesium-137, Strontium-90 and Plutonium-239 - are well known to the Marshall Islanders living downwind of the testing sites at Bikini and Enewetak atolls in the central Pacific, following sixty-seven A- and H-bombs exploded between 1946-58.
Quick Overview
- U.S. monetary tightening will return as the key issue in 2011 and policy cannot stay loose indefinitely, St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard said
- UK current account deficit grew to GBP10.5 billion in the final three months of the year, the biggest since the second quarter of 2009.
- Hutchison Whampoa’s 2010 profit rose 47% YOY.
- Bloomberg: Managers at U.K. oil giant BP PLC could face manslaughter charges for decisions made before the Gulf of Mexico explosion that killed 11 workers and triggered the worst oil spill in U.S. history last spring.
- Bloomberg: The cost of shipping liquefied natural gas may advance 67 percent to a five-year high as Japan replaces its crippled nuclear industry with power plants burning fossil fuels.
- Japan's recent earthquake and tsunami and its ongoing nuclear crisis haven't affected the government's schedule for tenders to import grains.
- Japan's jobless rate drops to 4.6% in February
- Radiation levels in Fukushima No 2 were strong enough to prevent crews entering the area, stalling efforts to restore the unit’s electrical and fuel-cooling systems. Doses of 1,000 millisieverts per hour were detected in the water, Tepco and nuclear safety officials said.
- Goldman Sachs: Japan's tsunami and nuclear reactor scare have put up to 20% of its meat production at risk.
- Bloomberg: Copper will lead a rally in base metals this year as increased consumption in China reduces inventories and higher prices encourage stockpiling, according to researcher Brook Hunt, a Wood Mackenzie company.
- Israel raises rates to 3%
- Biggest restaurant chain? Sandwich group Subway is the new leader with 33,749 locations around the world, compared to 32,737 for McDonald’s, according to Subway spokesperson Les Winograd.
- The prices of single-family homes in 20 cities fell 1.0% in January, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index. This is the sixth straight monthly decline.
- S&P cut Portugal's credit rating to BBB- from BBB
Monday, March 28, 2011
Quick Overview
- All Japanese ports affected by the devastating earthquake and tsunami that hit the northeastern part of the country on March 11 have now reopened, according to the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.
- (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s ruling party is considering abandoning a proposed corporate-tax cut and boosting levies on individuals to help pay for earthquake reconstruction and reduce the need to step up bond sales.
- U.S personal income rose 0.3% in February
- U.S personal consumption expenditures rose by 0.7%
- The average American family's household net worth declined 23% between 2007 and 2009, the Federal Reserve said.
- The National Association of Realtors reported that its pending home sales index rose 2.1% in February, but down 8.2 YoY.
- South Korea's business sentiment plunged to 99.3 in April from 113.5 the previous month.
- China's mobile phone operators added 19.83 million new subscribers in the first two months of this year, bringing the number of the country's cell phone users to 878.83 million.
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Quick Overview
- A surge in radioactive contamination reportedly was detected Saturday in seawater near Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
- Nuclear experts from Greenpeace have started monitoring radiation near the stricken Fukushima No. 1 atomic power plant. Greenpeace said it believed Japanese authorities may have been underplaying the scale of the disaster.
- Germans throughout Berlin, Hamburg, Munich, and Cologne participated in what are thought to be the country's largest-ever protests against nuclear power
- The first signs of radioactive materials from the quake-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan was found in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province on Thursday, China's nuclear authorities said on Saturday.
- RADIOACTIVE IODINE RELEASES FROM JAPAN’S FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI REACTORS MAY EXCEED THOSE OF THREE MILE ISLAND BY OVER 100,000 TIMES Vermont Yankee, for example, contains more spent fuel in its pool than all four stricken pools at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. Yet the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has not ordered any additional actions to protect this material.
- The Department of Commerce revised its Q4 2010 estimate of GDP upward to 3.1%, up from its previous estimate of 2.8%. (You may want to get the antacids ready for the year ahead)
- The U.S consumer-sentiment index fell to 67.5 in March
- The USDA's confirmation of a large corn sale of 49 million bushels to unknown, China?
- (Bloomberg) “The economy is looking pretty good,” Bullard told reporters in Marseille, France, today. “It is still reasonable to review QE2 in the coming meetings, especially this April meeting, and see if we want to decide to finish the program or to stop a little bit short.”
- Charles Plosser: The Fed should hike interest rates from the current range near zero to 2.5% within a year.
- The White House said Obama is committed to corporate tax reform, after the New York Times reported that GE owed no U.S. taxes in 2010.
- GE's tax filing is apparently 24,000 pages long........................................................................
Thursday, March 24, 2011
What They're Covering Up at Fukushima
They say as you move away the radiation is reduced in inverse ratio to the square of the distance. I want to say the reverse. Internal irradiation happens when radioactive material is ingested into the body. What happens? Say there is a nuclear particle one meter away from you. You breathe it in, it sticks inside your body; the distance between you and it is now at the micron level. One meter is 1000 millimeters, one micron is one thousandth of a millimeter. That’s a thousand times a thousand: a thousand squared. That’s the real meaning of “inverse ratio of the square of the distance.” Radiation exposure is increased by a factor of a trillion. Inhaling even the tiniest particle, that’s the danger.
They say as you move away the radiation is reduced in inverse ratio to the square of the distance. I want to say the reverse. Internal irradiation happens when radioactive material is ingested into the body. What happens? Say there is a nuclear particle one meter away from you. You breathe it in, it sticks inside your body; the distance between you and it is now at the micron level. One meter is 1000 millimeters, one micron is one thousandth of a millimeter. That’s a thousand times a thousand: a thousand squared. That’s the real meaning of “inverse ratio of the square of the distance.” Radiation exposure is increased by a factor of a trillion. Inhaling even the tiniest particle, that’s the danger.
Quick Overview
- China is hiking taxes on the mining of rare earth elements amid moves to mitigate environmental damage, control production levels and limit exports. Taxes will rise to either 30 Yuan ($4.5) or 60 Yuan ($9) per ton, depending on whether the elements are categorized as light or heavy.
- China, which controls about 95 percent of global shipments of rare earths, may start importing some of the material to meet rising domestic demand, according to Liu Junhua, a Chinese official.
- MCP
- The U.S. Interior Department said it would open up to mining land in Wyoming estimated to contain 758 million tons of low sulfur coal, in a move praised by the coal industry and condemned by environmental groups.
- A collapse of the euro currency was not "unthinkable" if it comes under too much strain, Buffett said.
- U.K retail sales fell by 0.8% in February - weaker than expected.
- A 7.0-magnitude earthquake rattled Myanmar.
- U.S. durable goods in February posted the biggest drop in four months, falling 0.9%.
- The IGC estimates world grain production to rise 4.6% to an all-time high of 1.805bn tonnes. However, even this estimate, which assumed a 4% rise in sowings to a 13-year high of 537m hectares, would be insufficient to restore production above demand.
- (WSJA) China may not be able to meet sharply rising food demand from its domestic resources, a senior Chinese agriculture official said, indicating room for further growth in imports.
Worst Texas Drought in 44 Years Eroding U.S. Wheat, Beef Supply
“Each day we don’t get rain, our potential yield goes down,” Anderson said. “If things turn perfect, I think we could have an average crop, but I’m talking about perfect from here on out. The odds of that are pretty slim.”
“Each day we don’t get rain, our potential yield goes down,” Anderson said. “If things turn perfect, I think we could have an average crop, but I’m talking about perfect from here on out. The odds of that are pretty slim.”
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Quick Overview
- Global refined copper supply was in a deficit of 305 thousand tons in 2010, according to International Copper Study Group (ICSG).
- Rio Tinto expects global copper consumption, over the next 20-30 years, to exceed the total historical consumption to date.
- Copper demand will exceed supply by 889,000 metric tons this year, Barclays estimated in a March 15 report.
- Global merchandise trade grew 17% in Q4 of 2010 compared to the same period in 2009 reaching US$4.1 trillion, slightly up on previous quarter, reflected in air freight and sea freight volume increases. Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) led the way.
- Starbucks Digital Network, debuts new content providers: The Economist, ESPN Insider and Mediabistro with Marvel Digital Comics coming soon.
- A piece of drill pipe trapped inside the Deepwater Horizon's blowout preventer kept the device from sealing the BP well, U.S. investigators said Wednesday.
- U.S. Crude oil stockpiles rose 2.1 million barrels to 352.8 million barrels, compared with an average survey estimate calling for a 1.7-million-barrel increase.
- U.S. Gasoline stockpiles fell 5.3 million barrels to 219.7 million barrels.
- U.S. sales of new homes fell 17% in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 250,000, a record low. (The housing numbers are notoriously unreliable on a MoM basis) The median sales price was $202,100, while the average sales price was $246,000
Inventories are at an 8.9 month supply.
- (Bloomberg) Meltzer, who has written a two-volume history of the central bank, said “inflation is coming.” Although price increases are currently “buried,” Meltzer said inflation “will come out as soon as housing prices stop falling.”
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Quick Overview
- (Bloomberg) Goldman Sachs Group Inc. forecasts a global expansion of 4.8 percent this year, while JPMorgan calls for 4.4 percent.
- U.S. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said he is likely to be among the first Fed officials to press for tighter monetary policy when the time comes, warning that inflationary pressures are building.
- OPEC said $120 oil is an “acceptable” level and will not hinder global growth.
- Goldman Sachs predicts U.S. corn acreage this year at 92.1 million (37.3 million hectares), above the U.S. Department of Agriculture's current estimate for 92.0 million. The USDA will release its first plantings data for 2011 based on a farmer surveys on Mar. 31.
- U.K. index of factory orders rose to 5, the highest since March 2008, from minus 8 in February.
Monday, March 21, 2011
Quick Overview
- The National Association of Realtors reported this morning that existing U.S. home sales fell 9.6% last month and prices dropped to the lowest level in nine years.
- Citigroup announced a 1-for-10 reverse stock split and says it plans to pay a penny-a-share dividend.
- The US Treasury Department is to begin selling off toxic assets worth an estimated $142bn, in an effort to close another chapter of the financial crisis.
- The average British household has seen its real-terms income fall by 1.6% in the worst three-year squeeze since the early 1980s, research suggested today.
Safe nuclear does exist, and China is leading the way with thorium China’s Academy of Sciences said it had chosen a “thorium-based molten salt reactor system”. The liquid fuel idea was pioneered by US physicists at Oak Ridge National Lab in the 1960s, but the US has long since dropped the ball. Further evidence of Barack `Obama’s “Sputnik moment”, you could say.
The megaquake connection: Are huge earthquakes linked? "If you have a quake of, let's say, 6.2 or larger, every sand grain on the planet is moving to the music of that event," Stein says.
(Kurzweil) How an MP3 can be used to hack your car
Hackers could gain access to a vehicle’s computer systems remotely, security experts from the University of California, San Diego, and the University of Washington have found.
In one example, cell phone hardware installed in luxury cars was attacked, allowing the team to inject malicious code into the car’s electronic controls. In theory, hackers could then sell the car to a thief, giving them its location and unlocking it remotely. The team also managed to take control of the car using a Trojan app on a phone that used an Android operating system and had been paired with the car’s Bluetooth system.
The researchers were able to show that software embedded in an MP3 file could install itself into the car’s firmware, enabling similar exploits to those above. If the car had a self-parking system, it could in theory be driven away by the hacker.
Hackers could gain access to a vehicle’s computer systems remotely, security experts from the University of California, San Diego, and the University of Washington have found.
In one example, cell phone hardware installed in luxury cars was attacked, allowing the team to inject malicious code into the car’s electronic controls. In theory, hackers could then sell the car to a thief, giving them its location and unlocking it remotely. The team also managed to take control of the car using a Trojan app on a phone that used an Android operating system and had been paired with the car’s Bluetooth system.
The researchers were able to show that software embedded in an MP3 file could install itself into the car’s firmware, enabling similar exploits to those above. If the car had a self-parking system, it could in theory be driven away by the hacker.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Quick Overview
- The U.S PPI rose 1.6% MoM, the most since June 2009. The core measure, which excludes food and energy costs rose 0.2%
- New U.S. housing construction fell 22.5% in February to 479,000 units, just above the record low set in April 2009. Building permits fell 8.2% to a record low.
- The U.S. current account trade deficit fell 9.7 percent to 113.3 billion U.S. dollars in the last quarter of 2010, the smallest imbalance since the end of 2009
- The Eurozone annual inflation rate was is 2.4%
- The British unemployment rate increased to 8.0 %
- March 16 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve officials signaled they’re unlikely to expand a $600-billion bond purchase plan as the recovery picks up steam and the threat that inflation will fall too low begins to wane.
- Portugal’s debt rating was cut by Moody’s to A3, four steps from junk.
- GOP voted to stop the Environmental Protection Agency's plan to regulate greenhouse gas emissions.
- Japan was warned over nuclear plants Wiki Leaks cables show.
- Republicans are fast tracking a bill to bar federal funding of National Public Radio (In an emergency meeting)
- 3/17 USDA announced the sale of 4.3 million bushels of old crop corn to "unknown destinations" this is probably China.
- Salt prices in China jumped to ten fold in some cities on the false belief that it can guard against a possible radiation exposure.
- The quake-tsunami-radiation-struck regions account for 6% of Japan's total agricultural land and 10% of the paddy area.
- AIG said first-quarter catastrophes including the earthquake in Japan will cost the company about $1 billion.
- AT&T agreed to buy T-Mobile from Deutsche Telekom for $39 billion
Monday, March 14, 2011
Meltdown at Fukushima
The boiling-water reactors at Fukushima — 40 years old and designed by General Electric — have spent fuel pools several stories above ground adjacent to the top of the reactor. The hydrogen explosion may have blown off the roof covering the pool, as it's not under containment. The pool requires water circulation to remove decay heat. If this doesn't happen, the water will evaporate and possibly boil off. If a pool wall or support is compromised, then drainage is a concern. Once the water drops to around 5-6 feet above the assemblies, dose rates could be life-threatening near the reactor building. If significant drainage occurs, after several hours the zirconium cladding around the irradiated uranium could ignite.
Then all bets are off.
The boiling-water reactors at Fukushima — 40 years old and designed by General Electric — have spent fuel pools several stories above ground adjacent to the top of the reactor. The hydrogen explosion may have blown off the roof covering the pool, as it's not under containment. The pool requires water circulation to remove decay heat. If this doesn't happen, the water will evaporate and possibly boil off. If a pool wall or support is compromised, then drainage is a concern. Once the water drops to around 5-6 feet above the assemblies, dose rates could be life-threatening near the reactor building. If significant drainage occurs, after several hours the zirconium cladding around the irradiated uranium could ignite.
Then all bets are off.
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Quick Overview
- (FT) AIR, the first of a handful of specialist catastrophe modelling agencies to release its Japan estimate, predicting losses of anything from $15bn to as much as $35bn.
- In coming quarters the quake is likely to mean more demand for copper. Japan accounts for around 5% of global copper demand.
- Inventories at U.S. businesses rose 0.9% in January.
- The Thomson Reuters and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index fell to 68.2 in March from 77.5 in February.
- China's CPI rose 4.9% YoY in February 2011
- A state of emergency was declared for all 77 Oklahoma counties as warm, dry winds fanned on the flames. Temperatures soared into the upper 70s on Friday in parts of Oklahoma, which is around 15 to 20 degrees above normal.
- State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley has resigned after he correctly called the Pentagon’s handling of Pfc. Bradley Manning, who is detained at the brig at Quantico,“ridiculous,counterproductive and stupid.”
- (Xinhuanet) -- A Chinese government adviser has recommended that the country use some of its 2.85 trillion US dollars of foreign exchange reserves, to buy more gold.
Li Yining, a senior economist at Peking University and a CPPCC member, says China should use the precious metal to hedge against risks of foreign currency devaluation.
Despite many academics making similar calls, an official with the country's foreign exchange administration recently said it wasn't possible for China to make big purchases in the spot gold market. He said that was because the government is afraid of squeezing out ordinary buyers, and pushing up the gold market prices.
- DJ reports up to 20% of Japan's grain may be destroyed
- When asked if the nuclear power accident in Japan could prove to be a turning point for the industry, Immelt (sorry but I’ve got the attention span of a flea) said: "There is now almost a 50-year track record of nuclear power that people can look back on and make their own judgments about."
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Quick Overview
- Monetary contraction by the EU has set off a fresh spasm of the Eurozone bond crisis
- U.S. first-time jobless claims rise by 26,000
- The USDA estimates:
- US wheat ending stock at 843 million bushels vs 818 last month
- US corn ending stocks at 675 million bushels, unchanged from last month. World ending stocks at 123.1 MMT
- US soy carryout at 140 million bushels. World ending stocks 58.33 MMT.
- The USDA increased its forecast for Florida's 2010-11 orange crop by four million 90-lb. boxes to 142 million boxes. Each box yields 1.57 gallons.
- Moody's lowered Spain's bond ratings to Aa2 from Aa1
- China posts $7.3 billion trade deficit in Feb.
- The U.S. trade deficit rose15.1% in January to $46.3 billion.
- (Dow Jones)--China is likely to re-enter the copper market as a more significant buyer of the metal in the second quarter, at a time when global supplies are forecast to be in a deficit of 500,000-600,000 metric tons.
- The Bank of England has held rates at 0.5% for the 25th month in a row, despite inflation running at 4% - double the target rate.
- U.S. foreclosure filings dropped to a 3-year low in February.
- Reports of Saudi police firing on protesters added a new worry.
- Starbucks (SBUX) is trading at an all time high.
- FDA approved Human Genome Sciences (HGSI) Benlysta
Wednesday, March 09, 2011
Quick Overview
- Sens. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) and Ben Cardin (D-Md.) introduced a bill that would repeal the 45 cents-per-gallon ethanol tax credit.
- Sleep-Deprived People Make Risky Decisions Based on Too Much Optimism. A night of sleep deprivation leads to increased brain activity in brain regions that assess positive outcomes, while at the same time, this deprivation leads to decreased activation in the brain areas that process negative outcomes, say scientists at two Duke University medical schools.
- The U.S. government has recovered 70% of total Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) disbursements, said the U.S. Treasury Department
- The United States remains the world's largest manufacturing economy, generating 1.6 trillion dollars of output, 11 % of the country's gross domestic product, according to a report. "Industrial restructuring has intensified, making U.S. manufacturing more competitive than ever," said LACEDC Chief Economist Nancy D. Sidhu, the report's author. "The U.S. share of global manufacturing has remained at or above 20 % for most of the past two decades.”It is a myth that manufacturing is disappearing from the region and that all operations are moving to countries with low-cost labor, the report noted.
Tuesday, March 08, 2011
Oil markets brace for Saudi 'rage' as global spare capacity wears thin
The world's economic fate now hangs on the success of Wahabi repression
The world's economic fate now hangs on the success of Wahabi repression
Quick Overvview
- Japan’s January core machinery orders rose 4.2% MoM and 5.9% YoY.
- The French trade deficit in January widened to 5.89 billion Euros (8.21 billion U.S. dollars) from 5.6 billion Euros (7.8 billion dollars) in December.
- YoY import cargo volume through major us ports is expected to be up 11 % in March, according to the monthly Global Port Tracker Report.
Monday, March 07, 2011
Quick Overview
- (Bloomberg) -- China should use economic and administrative measures to curb the production and exports of corn-based products including starch and alcohol, to guarantee supply to livestock and poultry.
- China will boost its meat and sugar reserves and expand the scope of commodities reserves, the Ministry of Commerce said.
- Saudis mobilize thousands of troops to quell growing revolt.
- (Bloomberg) -- Global harvests of corn and wheat may fall short of demand again if the La Nina weather event persists through July, tightening global grain supplies, according to forecaster Telvent DTN Inc.
- (Bloomberg) -- Russia’s ban on grain exports means the country’s farmers will plant the fewest wheat fields in four years.
- (FT) The US Mint has reported record sales of silver American Eagle coins in the past two months. Sales hit 9.7m ounces in January and February combined – more than was sold in an entire year in 2005.
- The U.S unemployment rate fell to 8.9% in February, down from 9.0% the previous month.
- Moody's downgraded Greece to B1 from Ba1, and kept its outlook negative.
Thursday, March 03, 2011
Quick Overview
- Trichet said on Thursday that the ECB may raise interest rates next month due to mounting inflationary pressures
- The global sugar market will be in deficit for a third year said Czarnikow. The shortfall expected is 3.7 million tons.
- The U.S. Energy Department said crude oil inventories fell 364,000 barrels to 346.4 million.
- First time claims for U.S. unemployment benefits fell by 20,000 to 368,000 in the week ending Feb. 26.
- MoM retail trade volume in the Eurozone gained 0.4 % in January
Tuesday, March 01, 2011
I Can’t Think!
The Twitterization of our culture has revolutionized our lives, but with an unintended consequence—our overloaded brains freeze when we have to make decisions.
The Twitterization of our culture has revolutionized our lives, but with an unintended consequence—our overloaded brains freeze when we have to make decisions.
Quick Overview
- The ISM’s factory index rose to 61.4 from 60.8.
- Bernanke said downside risks to the recovery have receded, and the risk of deflation has become negligible.
- Ford February US sales rose 14%. GM's US auto sales rose 46%
- The global cocoa market is forecast to swing into a surplus of 119,000 metric tons in the 2010-11 crop marketing year compared with a revised 66,000-ton deficit in 2009-10, the International Cocoa Organization said.
- Gold prices rose to within $10 of their record high on Tuesday, while silver hit a 31-year high.
- (Bloomberg)Russia, the world’s biggest palladium producer, is shipping the smallest amount of metal to Switzerland in 15 years
Monday, February 28, 2011
Quick Overview
- The ISM index rose to 71.2 from 68.8 last month, the highest level since July 1988.
- The International Grains Council has lowered its forecast for Philippines rice stocks this year by 20% to a 13-year low of 1.6 million tons or 12% of annual consumption.
- U.S. Pending home resales fell 2.8 % after a revised 3.2 % decrease the prior month.
- U.S personal income rose 1.0% in Jan. -- marking the biggest increase in a year and a half.
- U.S. consumer spending rose 0.2%.
- Japan's industrial production in January climbed 2.4 percent from the previous month, marking the third straight month of increase.
- Australian business chiefs predicted a patchy economic growth outlook for 2011, with trade exposed industries particularly hit by the strength of the Australian dollar.
- Euro Dollar interest rates are approaching ZERO (100=0). Wondering where the next “big” move will be. UP or DOWN?
- The US Monetary Base is in new high ground.
- Silver lending rate is still below zero.
- Canada’s GDP rose 3.3% following an upwardly revised 1.8% gain in the previous three months. The Bank of Canada could raise rates sooner rather than later.
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Quick Overview
- Warren Buffett: "We are not natively smarter than we were when our country was founded nor do we work harder. But look around you and see a world beyond the dreams of any colonial citizen. Now, as in 1776, 1861, 1932 and 1941, America's best days lie ahead."
- Existing home sales rose for the third month in a row in January and they now exceed year ago levels. Sales rose by 2.7% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.36 million homes, which is also up 5.3% from year-ago levels.
- (FT) Northern Rock is poised to launch a range of mortgages offering up to 90 per cent of a property’s value, marking the nationalized bank’s return to riskier lending three years after its collapse and government bail-out.
- US durable goods orders rose 2.7% in January
- US first time claims for unemployment benefits fell 22,000 to 391,000 in the week ending February 19
- (FT) The Republican plan to slash government spending by $61bn in 2011 could reduce US economic growth by 1.5 to 2 percentage points in the second and third quarters of the year, a Goldman Sachs economist has warned.
- (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s public pension fund, the world’s largest, said it may become a net seller of bonds to cover payments in the world’s most rapidly aging society.
- Faced with stiff opposition from Republicans in Congress the EPA will trim costs to control toxic air pollution by 50%. Some half-dozen bills have been introduced this year to block agency regulation.
- A new Reuters report that looked at maternity leave in 190 countries show 178 guarantee paid leave for new mothers, nine have undefined policies and only three - just three - offer "no legal guarantee of paid maternity leave," -- One of those three is the United States.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
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